Author Archives: Jane Porter

Skim Sky Blue is open!

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My exhibition of woodcuts and collage inspired by the Thames, Skim Sky Blue, opened last night – thanks to everyone who came along. That’s me in the large orange necklace – it came out of the river Wandle on one of the Wandle Trust cleanups!

I’ll post more very soon showing the actual pictures. Do drop in if you’re anywhere near Southfields – it’s just a minute’s walk from Southfields tube station on the District Line. The show is on at The Art Cabin at 11 Brookwood Road, London SW18 5BL every day from now until Sunday May 18th, and it is part of Wandsworth Arts Festival Fringe.

Skim Sky Blue: nearly ready . . .

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I’ve just spent another couple of days at the London Print Studio finalising prints for my exhibition next week, Skim Sky Blue – part of Wandsworth Arts Festival Fringe: there’s a bit of a preview of some of the images shown above. Over the weekend I’ll be doing a little bit of extra collage work and starting on the framing. The big parcel with a blue ribbon is all my used printing plates, ready to take home – I didn’t count them but they were very numerous and carving them has left me with a worn patch on the side of my little finger. That aside it’s been very enjoyable working completely non-digitally for a change…

Meet Mr Mostyn

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Having a sort-out at home, I came across this pack of Happy Families playing cards I made when doing an MA in Illustration and Animation at Kingston University (almost ten years ago)…I made each character entirely in collage (this is just a selection – there are lots more) and named them after places on a street map of Llandudno, north Wales. Ebenezer Vaughan is my favourite. Maybe it’s time I invented a story for them all?

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Treacle and oystercatchers

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Having explored all of the Thames from source to Barrier, I thought I would take a look at what lies further east. Beginning at the Thames Barrier Park (just by Pontoon Dock DLR station), I was impressed with the wonderful undulations of the ‘green dock’ and the diagonal planting of hornbeams and rare oaks, all designed by French landscape architect Allain Provost. The park is a tranquil space with nicely maturing planting, superb views and a good cafe – well worth a visit. Crossrail works made the walk to the Woolwich Ferry a bit of a weary trudge, but the ferry itself (amazingly still free) was a good ride, manoevring between orange tugs hauling heavy loads. Heading east, the river gets impressively wide, and the ships get larger.

Oystercatchers, grey wagtails and even rabbits are mixed in with industry such as waste processing sites, aggregate businesses and sewage works, making this a very interesting and varied stretch of water. It was also a day of slightly overwhelming smells – from the treacle of the sugar works, to the hawthorn blossom and hint of seasalt in the air to the knockout punch of the sewage works.

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Experimenting and accidental embossing

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My prints are gradually taking shape for the Thames-themed exhibition I’m holding next month, Skim Sky Blue. I had an experimental day at London Print Studio last week, printing some woodcuts I’d made on a variety of different collaged backgrounds, and trying them out in different combinations and on different types of paper. It was a useful day, and it’s given me lots of ideas on how to progress. One problem I have is that (through spending too much time on the river hauling oars in a skiff) my arms are a bit too strong and I can’t seem to help putting a bit too much pressure on as I tighten the handle on the Beever Press – with the result that everything comes out heavily embossed (you can see what I mean in the picture below, at the right, which shows the back of the paper). I do quite like this effect, but I’m not sure it’s right for what I’m trying to do so for the next session I’ll need to ease off a bit.

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French knitting in Amsterdam

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A little while ago I was in Amsterdam and spotted these colourful characters in someone’s canalside window – they are bobbins for French knitting, which I used to love doing as a child. It seems to be the custom in Holland to fill your street-side windows with interesting things for passers-by to look at. With its leaning buildings, bridges and barges it’s a very visually stimulating city.

This special place fills us with love…

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A few weeks ago I spent the afternoon with the Over 55s group – the ‘Recycled Teenagers’ – at Sutton House, the wonderful Tudor National Trust property in Hackney. They meet once a week to tell stories, dance, write – and sometimes to do art projects too. It was Valentine’s day, so we focused on what the group loved about Sutton House, with everyone suggesting ideas which we formed into a collective sentence reflecting the feelings of the group. Since the house used to be known as ‘The Bryck House’, we also had a brick theme, so we recycled some old foamboard to make a brick for each person, decorated them with woven paper, added a gold border and then the words, before fixing them to the wall in a proper bond pattern. I think the sentence they came up with is really touching and lovely – and the bricks look like precious objects or possibly luxury chocolate bars…

My Writing Process

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My friend and fellow illustrator Bridget Strevens-Marzo invited me to take part in the ‘My Writing Process’ blog tour – and this seemed like a good opportunity to reflect on how I work. Bridget’s post was a fascinating glimpse into her mind and methods – she’s someone whose work I really admire and I can’t wait to get my hands on her forthcoming book with Tate Publishing, ‘Tiz and Ott’s Big Draw’ which really looks into the heart of being creative in a wonderfully accessible way.

The blog tour consists of four questions, so here goes:

1) What am I working on?

As always I have several ideas on the go at once, all picture books. However since I am at that delicate stage of discussing projects with publishers but nothing signed and sealed, I don’t want to give too much away! As you can see on my desk above, I’ve been looking at ‘A Home Afloat’ as one of the stories I’m working on is set aboard a houseboat (a bit of a wish-fulfilment fantasy for me). I was recently in Amsterdam and went to the marvellous Houseboat Museum – it was so inviting I would have been happy to move in on the spot. I’ve always been fascinated by rivers so setting a story around one feels like a very natural thing to do.

I’m also preparing for an exhibition inspired by the River Thames – ‘Skim Sky Blue’, which is going to be on for the first half of May at The Art Cabin. So in between bouts of writing stories, I’m getting out my wood cutting tools and creating huge piles of wood shavings on my desk. There’s more about this project in earlier posts, here and here.

2) How does my work differ from others of its genre?

That’s a tricky one to answer! I would like to think my work is characterised by having a sense of humour and a sense of playfulness, which I hope comes out in both words and pictures.

3) Why do I write what I do?

I’ve always been fond of animals, so they make very natural subjects for me to draw and write about. I’m very influenced by the stories I used to love when I was little – like Bridget I loved the eccentricity of Ant and Bee, and I also loved the humour and detail in Richard Scarry. It was Quentin Blake’s illustrations that initially drew me to the Uncle stories, but the text turned out to be one of the funniest things I’ve ever read. But my favourite book of all as a child was Modern Tales and Fables illustrated by Vaclav Sivko, whose surreal illustrations I have written about in a previous post.

4) How does your writing process work?

I have a notebook with me at all times and write down or sketch anything I see or overhear that might provide a spark for a story. Each week I run an art class for under 5s, and I find the way the children think, talk and even move very inspiring. One week a little girl came in dressed in a home-made carrot costume – I’ve put that in a story. I like to develop the words and pictures together, so as an idea takes shape I’ll draw out 12 very rough boxes in my notebook and start making notes, both visual and in words, of what will go on each of the 12 spreads. Then I’ll start making a small paper dummy book, putting words and pictures together to get a feel for how the pace and page-turns will work. Then I’ll keep it with me, keep glancing at it and tweaking little bits, or rearranging whole sections, until several versions later I might decide it’s ready to show someone. I’ve also joined a monthly picture book writers’ crit group with fellow author-illustrators, which is enormously helpful and supportive and a great way to move an idea up a gear.

Next week I’m passing the baton on to the very talented illustrator and writer Faye Hanson. Faye’s first book was published by Macmillan in 2010 and she’s happiest when dreaming up fluffy characters and fantastical contraptions – I have had a sneak preview of her new book and it is really special.

They took all the steam, put it in the Steam Museum…

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I am hugely looking forward to a very special event tomorrow – the grand re-opening of the London Museum of Water and Steam (formerly Kew Bridge Steam Museum) after a big refurbishment. I’ve designed, written and illustrated the family trail for the museum – it’s based around the character of Robert Smith, a 15 year-old boy who worked there when it was a functioning pumping station in Victorian days.

If you’ve never been there (or even if you have), it is well worth a visit – it’s fabulous for families (specially with the brand new splash zone and the ever-popular steam-engine hauled rides at weekends). It’s also a must for anyone interested in Victorian architecture and engineering, and it’s a wonderful place to go and draw for the day – the engines are breathtaking in both scale and detail (Dickens went there and said “What a monster” when he saw the Ninety-Inch engine). It’s a particularly special place for me as both my parents are volunteers there, and I even had my wedding reception there many years ago. If you’re visiting, make sure you go up past the Hammersmith Beam to the wonderful wildflower and vegetable garden which was created by my mother – and don’t miss the Victorian lady scarecrow she made to keep the birds off the broad beans.

There are also artists’ studios and a forge, and a brand new cafe – so many reasons to pay a visit to the Museum, which is just by Kew Bridge station in Brentford. Apologies for the title of the post, but every time I think of the museum this version of the Joni Mitchell song Big Yellow Taxi pops into my head and makes me smile…

 

Koppelflutes and Clarions

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What has nearly 8000 pipes with names like poetry and makes a sound as humungous as an elephant?

The answer is the spectacular organ at the Royal Festival Hall, which has spent the last two years being restored and is ready to play again from next week as part of the Southbank Centre’s grand gala launch and Pull Out All The Stops organ music festival. The Southbank Centre asked me to work with two schools, Telferscot Primary in Balham and Annfield Plain Junior School in County Durham, to create a children’s guide to the organ, for and by children, and the guide will be given away to visitors to the festival.

I got the children to imagine the organ as a living organism, a community of different animals making different sounds, and then I put their drawings together and matched them up with the different types of pipe (which have the most marvellously evocative names). We also invented a board game, which is on the back of the guide and can also be downloaded here, and instructions to make your own organ, which you can download here.

You can watch the two fantastic films the children created with animator John Harmer and film-maker Samantha Harrie, explaining how the organ is made, and how it works, here. It’s been a very exciting project to be involved with, and I am looking forward to seeing all the children again at the launch – they were very inspiring to work with and had so many brilliant ideas. Many thanks to all the children and staff at both schools, to Alice from the Southbank Centre, and to John and Sam for being such fun to work with – and of course to the organ itself!